Posted on 01/17/2012 6:59:45 PM PST by Gamecock
Ill never forget hearing Dr. Doug Kelly (one of my theology professors in seminary) saying in class, If you want to make people mad, preach law. If you want to make them really, really mad preach grace. I didnt know what he meant then. But I do now.
The law offends us because it tells us what to doand we hate anyone telling us what to do, most of the time. But, ironically, grace offends us even more because it tells us that theres nothing we can do, that everything has already been done. And if theres something we hate more than being told what to do, its being told that we cant do anything, that we cant earn anythingthat were helpless, weak, and needy.
The law, at least, assures us that we determine our own destiny.
The law does promise life to me,This we understand. And we like it. We like it because we maintain controlthe outcome of our life remains in our hands. Give me three steps to a happy marriage and I can guarantee myself a happy marriage if I follow the three steps. If we can do certain things, meet certain standards (whether Gods, my own, my parents, my spouses, societys, whatever) and become a certain way, well make it. Law seems safe because it breeds a sense of manageability. It keeps life formulaic and predictable. It keeps earning-power in our camp.
If my obedience perfect be. (Ralph Erskine)
The logic of law makes sense.
The logic of grace, on the other hand, doesnt.
Grace is thickly counter-intuitive. It feels risky and unfair. It turns everything that makes sense to us upside-down. Like Jobs friends, we naturally conclude that good people get good stuff and bad people get bad stuff. The idea that bad people get good stuff seems irrational and wrongheaded on every level. It offends our deepest sense of justice and rightness.
Grace is not rational The gospel of grace throws our glory train off its tracks. Instead of calculating, mastering, and determining, we find ourselves completely helpless, left with no option but to fall into the everlasting arms of the God who could consume us in his wrath but instead embraces us in his Son. (Mike Horton)
So, it doesnt surprise me at all when I hear people react to grace with suspicion and doubt. It doesnt surprise me that when people talk about grace, I hear lots of buts and brakes, conditions and qualifications. Thats just the flesh fighting for its life, after all. As Walter Marshall says in his book The Gospel Mystery of Sanctification, By nature, you are completely addicted to a legal method of salvation. Even after you become a Christian by believing the Gospel, your heart is still addicted to salvation by works You find it hard to believe that you should get any blessing before you work for it.
Because we are natural born do-it-yourselfersGod-wannabes(and have been since Genesis 3), the vitriol reaction to unconditional grace is understandable. Grace generates panic because it wrestles both control and glory out of our hands. This means that the part of you that gets angry and upset and mean and defensive and slanderous and critical and skeptical and feisty when you hear about grace is the very part of you that needs to be reckoned dead. Thats where mortification beginsit begins with that part of us that hates grace.
But while Im not surprised when I hear venomous rejoinders to grace (the flesh is always resistant to It is finished), I am saddened when the very pack of people that God has unconditionally saved and continues to sustain by his free grace are the very ones who push back most violently against it. Some professing Christians sound like ungrateful children who cant stop biting the very hand that feeds them. It amazes me that you will hear great concern from inside the church about too much grace but rarely will you ever hear great concern from inside the church about too many rules. Why? Because we are by nature glory-hoarding, self-centered control freaks. Thats why.
Its high time for the church to honor God by embracing sola gratia anewthe high-octane grace that takes our conscience by the scruff of the neck and breathes new life into us with a pardon so scandalous that we cannot help but be changed For many of us the time has come to abandon once and for all our play-it-safe, toe-dabbling Christianity and dive in (Dane Ortlund). It is time, as Robert Farrar Capon put it, to get drunk on grace. Two hundred-proof, defiant grace.
Its scandalous and scary, unnatural and undomesticated
but its the only thing that can set us free and light the church on fire.
The name was familiar to me (I thought right that he is Billy Graham’s grandson, so I looked him up. I did not realize he was here in Florida and is the Pastor at Coral Ridge.
I looked at the website and this Pastor and his church truly walk the walk. You can see they have a true zeal to serve Christ and do so with all their hearts.
The world needs more men like him.
IBLBLWDLFIOC!
[In before the Law Bound Legalists Who Drag the Law from Israel Onto the Church]
Love it...so much truth in so few words
This guy heard me discussing fallacy of free will with some of my arminian brothers.
One of the more dumb things Paul wrote.
Wouldn't that be adding something else, irresistible, to unconditional grace in the article, or did i miss it?
And praise God! Law & Grace keeps our minds in conflict until the Spirit teaches us:
“Wherefore the law was our schoolmaster to bring us unto Christ, that we might be justified by faith.” (Galatians 3:24)
As many as 25 years ago a pastor in Memphis used to teach:
“To give less under grace, than you do under law, is a disgrace to grace.”
That goes for much more than giving, but also for all our living!”
As many as 25 years ago a pastor in Memphis used to teach:
“To give less under grace, than you do under law, is a disgrace to grace.”
That goes for much more than giving, but also for all our living!”
Thank you for this article. Very well said.
Great article! Thanks for posting it.
And some of ‘em have condos in Myrtle Beach, too.
Thanks for pinging me on your post.
Thanks Gamecock — great article!
Hoss
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